Posts tagged ‘art gallery’
Color Shock celebrates color and couture at the TACTile Textile Art Center

Color Shock at TACtile
Susan Froyd wrote in Westword about the Color Shock style show.
The Yves Saint Laurent spectacular has come and gone from the Denver Art Museum, but its inspiration — a renewed appreciation for the craft, creativity and sheer beauty of high couture — stays on, especially within the local design community.
The value of that exhibition certainly wasn’t lost on Dianne Denholm of the TACtile Textile Arts Center, a woman who’s dedicated her career to furthering the textile arts — and a winner of a 2012 MasterMind award.
By Denholm’s own admission, YSL had a turn-around effect on the way she’s curating her gallery space and in turn inspired tomorrow’s Color Shock fashion show at TACtile. A hue-heavy showcase for local designers, the runway will catch fire at 7 p.m. on Saturday, August 11, following a meet-and-greet reception at 6 p.m.
Think Vivian Westwood, Diane Von Furstenberg, Prada and, of course YSL, all of whom revel(ed) in color, and prepare to put on your shades for this one.
Admission is $3 to $5; e-mail TACtile or call 720-524-8886 for reservations and information.
“Original Friends” dolls speak to the heart
Rebecca Roth didn’t start out wanting to be a fiber artist. She came to doll-making through a uniquely difficult, yet inspiring, route.
An American expatriate living in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, Rebecca was wrongfully incarcerated in a women’s prison outside of Guadalajara for four years. The lengthy and convoluted Mexican legal system leaves many people in prison for years without trial or definitive sentences. Rebecca’s time in the overcrowded women’s prison was understandably painful, depressing, and soul depleting. She knew that to survive she needed something to lift her spirits.
That something came in the form of a child born to a fellow inmate in the prison. Lupita and her mother lived with Rebecca and 13 other women in a cell designed for six. Lupita had no toys or any other trappings of a “normal’ childhood. Rebecca found herself thinking, Lupita needs a doll. This inspired Rebecca to create her first Original Friend doll from scraps of fabric, yarn, and ribbon collected from sewing workrooms and classes in the prison.
Rebecca began collaborating with other women in the prison to make and sell more dolls. The dolls are colorful and festive, with smiling faces and fanciful clothing and jewelry. Each has its own unique personality. Rebecca and her doll-making friends sold over 100 dolls while she was still in prison. Once she was released she decided to continue working with her friends who are still incarcerated to make and sell dolls. The proceeds from doll sales go back to the women in prison to provide for their personal needs; making the dolls helps build their skills and self-esteem.
Tactile is happy to be hosting a collection of Original Friend dolls for display and purchase. Come by and see these fun and inspiring creations. You can learn more about Rebecca, the other doll-makers, and the dolls at their website.
July 28, 2012 at 2:21 pm Kathy Mitchell-Garton Leave a comment
World Threads III pays homage to global fiber arts at TACtile Textile Arts Center

Earlier this month, I went to TACtile to capture the World Threads exhibit in photographs. Luckily, our intern from CSU, Kelly Phillips was there to assist me in taking the photos. These three images below capture just some of the beauty of the textile arts represented in the show. Our global talks on Saturday, May 26, feature:
11 am :: Cyndi Maupin, Entwined Artistry
2pm :: Maryanne Wise, Guatemala Rugs
Our exhibit closes at 5:00 on Saturday, the last day of World Threads III.
Featured in Westword, Susan Froyd wrote, One of TACtile Textile Arts Center’s most colorful exhibits is back: World Threads III: Preserving Textile Traditions, featuring — as in the past — a beautiful global palette of fiber-arts handiwork to both look at and to buy. Even more beautiful is the humanitarian purpose behind the show — to sustain traditional arts while supporting women artisans living in poverty and sometimes dire conditions.

This year’s show includes handcrafts — jewelry, weavings, baskets, embroidery, clothing and more — from sixteen nonprofit humanitarian groups working with artisans from Africa, Southeast Asia, Nepal, India, Peru, Guatemala, and other countries.
TACtile, led by director and 2012 Westword MasterMind Dianne Denholm, is also serving up an ongoing series of Global Talks by the various vendors on Saturdays for the duration of the show, which ends May 26.
TACtile is pleased to announce the opening on June 8th of two exhibits, Summer Daze and Colorado Couture: Past and Present. Follow this blog to learn more. Call 720.524.8886 and visit TACtileArts.org
photos by Carol Naff
TACtile Bonus at World Threads III
Fabulous “Global Talks” presented by social entrepreneurs whose products are part of the World Threads III Marketplace. Each Saturday meet them and learn about the creative textile artisans in developing countries.

Maya Cielo Dyer
May 5: 12 pm :: Charlotte Otto, Ten Thousand Villages
1 pm :: Patricia Stoddard, Ralli Quilts
2 pm :: Paula Carter, Egyptian Leather Importing
May 12: ($5 donation at the door)
Mother’s Saturday Tea celebrating mothers around the world
12pm :: Penny Webster, Woven Promises
1 pm :: Linda Stark & Marilyn Murphy, Cloth Roads
2 – 4 pm :: Creative Scarf Tying Demonstration – Eloise Wagers
May 19: 11 am :: Katrina Wert, A Little Something
12 pm :: Sen Nguyen, Bridging Hope
1 pm :: Marissa Saints, Dsenyo
May 26: 11 am :: Cyndi Maupin, Entwined Artistry
2pm :: Maryanne Wise, Guatemala Rugs
World Threads III, Preserving Textile Traditions Sale and Exhibit
TACtile Textile Arts Center presents its colorful 3rd annual World Threads III, Preserving Textile Traditions, to benefit the artists, co-operatives, and social enterprises that support preservation of the fiber arts around the world, Saturday, April 28 through Saturday, May 26, 2012. TACtile is pleased to be showing almost all vendors from previous years, plus several new ones. This gallery exhibit is free and open to the public, Tuesday – Saturday, 12:00 – 5:00 p.m. at 1955 S. Quince Street, Suite 200, Denver, CO 80231. Free Parking.
These festivities are planned throughout the month:
- World Chats: Each Saturday, April 28 through May 19 special presentations by the participating organizations about their textile artisan projects.
- April 27: Members opening reception 5– 7:00 p.m. with a world foods buffet sponsored by the TACtile Board of Directors.
- Periodic demonstrations of artisans using back strap looms.
- May 12: Special Mother’s Day World Tea, 2-5:00 pm
- Private collection Costumes & Textiles on exhibit.
Exhibit and Sale
World Threads III, Preserving Textile Traditions is both an exhibit and marketplace. The exhibit features regional collector costumes, textiles and objects from textile rich regions of the world. The marketplace is a colorful array of fashions, jewelry, crafts, basketry, embroidery, jewelry, gifts and home décor from artists in Africa, South and Central America, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. Sales from the month-long festivities strengthen TACtile and its global partners to sustain textile arts worldwide. The assistance leads to employment of women and youth to provide income, often used to attend school, provide jobs and raise their quality of life in their homelands.
Sixteen regionally based, humanitarian groups will have handcrafted fiber art from around the world for sale to support their work.
1. “A Little Something” a Denver refugee women’s craft cooperative
2. “Maya Cielo” supporting weaving coops in Guatemala
3. “Outreach Uganda” spotlighting Uganda
4. “Bridging Hope” supporting Vietnam & Cambodia
5. “Eternal Threads” supporting Nepal & Madagascar
6. Cloth Roads reaching 17 countries world-wide
7. “Tambani” preserves South African folklore by the Venda women
8. “Dsenyo” empowers Malawi women of Africa.
9. “Memsahib Mar” supports nomadic women in India
10. “Anoothi” helping Rajasthan, India & Vatsalyan street children
11. “Woven Promises” supports Ethiopia and Namibia.
12. “Annie O Boutique” representing Peru
13. “Silks & Stones” helping silk weaving coops in Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia, Vietnam and Thailand.
14. “Entwined Artistry” silk makers in Cambodia
15. “Cultural Cloth” rug hookers in Guatemala
16. “One World Buttons” button makers from Armenia to Zimbabwe 9 countries
The Need As modern industrial products seep into rural village life, traditional textile arts become rare treasures made and worn only by the older skilled generation, often underappreciated by the younger. TACtile is dedicated to increasing textile art as a living art form throughout all generations. An important aspect to sustaining these beautiful arts is providing a market for them. Educating artisans to translate their skills to modern demand and educating audiences to find value in their human heritage happens with TACtile’s World Threads event. TACtile serves as an important channel to both groups.
In addition, younger generations are saved from leaving their families for poor or very dangerous working conditions and slave trades elsewhere.
Traditional Textiles Breed Quality Contemporary Textiles. Despite living in extreme poverty, artisans in developing countries create incredibly beautiful hand-woven silk, wool, linen, cotton and decorative textiles. They are made on primitive looms, with surfaces often covered with intricate hand embroidery and beadwork. Mud and natural dyes transcend through the cloth into fast paced lifestyles of American consumers, adding meaningful value to the wearer. Textile arts are the threads that keep us all connected across the planet.
Baskets, a functional necessity in the developing world, have become an art form using locally available materials, such as bamboo and recycled box straps. Basket making skills are translated to totes, backpacks and table décor.
Beadwork & Embroidery are an integral part of all cultures, used as body adornment or to embellish cloth. Beads in the show are made from all kinds of materials, including the popular hand rolled magazine paper to form beads in handbags and jewelry. Stitched embroidery motifs serve as humorous storytelling or elegant sophisticated cultural expression.
Local Economy Boost During economic conditions that require thoughtful use of consumer dollars, World Threads III provides products of need that have several layers of higher value. Local people are inspired to be creative themselves. There is a festive quality to buying things you need while also making far away communities happy, with a higher quality of life.
For more information, contact TACtile Textile Arts Center at info@tactilearts.org – 720-524.8886 and visit tactilearts.org
Westword names five 2012 Master Minds
Dianne D’Lea Denholm is named a 2012 Master Mind by Westword – awarded to only five cultural visionaries each year — artists and organizations alike — working to change the cultural landscape of metro Denver. Read all about it at Westword.
Follow TACtile’s Board on Pinterest. Remember to visit TACtilearts.org to find classes, art exhibits, and special gifts for that special person.
Fallene Wells Presents an Exclusive Collection at TACtile

Designer Fallene Wells
On Friday, February 17, from 6:30 – 8:30 pm, TACtile presents an exclusive collection by Denver fashion designer and Project Runway Season 9 alumnus Fallene Wells. Guests will be treated to Wells’ designs on models and mannequins along with music and food from the event’s sponsors. The event will be held at TACtile’s gallery at 1955 South Quince Street, Suite 200 Denver Colorado 80231.
In addition, the event will feature information about the new CoSewn, a “resource, development, and production hub for independent and emerging designers and custom sewing clients.” TACtile’s Executive Director, Dianne D’Lea Denholm will speak about upcoming opportunities at TACtile, and guests will be able to tour the facility.
For a $20 entry fee and a $2 donation, enjoy an evening of entertainment, door prizes, and time to spend with Designer Fallene Wells, Dianne D’Lea Denholm, and other notables at TACtile. For more information and reservations, visit TACtile
Fiber Forest by Westcliffe Contemporary Quilters and Fiber Artists
TACtile Textile Arts Center is pleased to feature the Fiber Forest exhibit by the
Westcliffe Contemporary Quilters and Fiber Artists
Enjoy a gentle walk through a Fantasy Fiber Forest of 18 types of trees that tell stories of hope, faith, healing, strength, mythology, poetry and joy. Each tree is a visual and tactile celebration of texture, color, and individuality using fabrics in the form of contemporary quilts. The trees are hanging in a maze from ceiling to floor at the TACtile Textile Arts Center gallery from February 16-March 31.
TACtile celebrates the deep roots that textile arts have in our state by giving visibility to so many branches of fiber arts guilds in our mountain, plains and urban communities. TACtile offers classes and events throughout the year in contemporary quilting and many other textile art disciplines.
The exhibit is free and open to the public. TACtile Winter Hours are Thursday – Saturday, 12noon – 5pm, Free parking. info@tactilearts.org At the JHB Button Warehouse, 1955 So. Quince #200, Denver 8023, near Quebec & Evans. TACtilearts.org
World Map Display and new winter hours
Pat Martinek (teacher of many classes at TACtile) has an amazing World map on display at TACtile for a short time.
Pat is a wonderful teacher and also the President of Handweavers Guild of Boulder. She has a delightful approach to the fiber culture, as a past geologist, dyer, spinner, weaver and really engaging personality.
She just did this amazing world map (takes up 2 tables) showing about 2 dozen animal fiber types, with pins and photos, and little felted animals pointing to all the different areas on the globe. It’s a wonderful educational display. We have it at TACtile for a little while. Come see it soon. Quite creatively done….
Also, TACtile just announced a change in hours. We’re doing Winter Hours: Noon-5 p.m., Thursday – Saturday. We’re taking some extra time to plan and strengthen our gallery exhibits and class programming for 2012. It’s our 5th year and we want to make it count!
Guest Blogger: Susan Froyd, Arts and Culture Editor at Westword. 2012 Westword MasterMind Dianne Denholm has presented exhibitions focusing on the fiber arts in nearly every aspect since opening the TACtile Textile Arts Center six years ago. But never before had she turned the magnifying glass on the fine art of dressmaking and couture, a subject that’s undergone a renaissance in Denver this spring, thanks to the Denver Art Museum’s Yves Saint Laurent block-buster.




